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Reject This Threat to Teen Safety … Once Again

VOTE NO ON PROP. 4!

Q: Why vote "NO" on Prop. 4? Because it puts teens at risk.

A: Parents rightfully want to be involved in their teenagers’ lives and we want our daughters to come to us if they become pregnant.

But in the real world, these laws don’t work. No law can mandate family communication.

Think about it, not all teens live in homes where communication is possible.

The reality is desperate teens take desperate measures.

She’s scared, she’s pregnant, what is she going to do?

She certainly can’t navigate a crowded courthouse and face a judge she’s never met before. She may take matters into her own hands by:

resorting to an unsafe, back alley, or illegal abortion;

going across the border;

or even contemplating suicide.

Our daughters don’t need Prop. 4 – they need counseling and quality medical care without delay.

VOTE NO ON 4!

 

'Sarah's Law' would not have applied to 'Sarah,' acknowledge backers of the abortion-notification measure
The teen whose death led to calls for parental notification in abortion cases was married and had a child. Critics of California's Prop. 4 file a suit asking to remove her story from the voter guide.

By Patrick McGreevy, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 2, 2008

SACRAMENTO -- -- Backers of a ballot measure that would require parents to be notified before an abortion is performed on a minor acknowledged Friday that the 15-year-old on which "Sarah's Law" is based had a child and was in a common-law marriage before she died of complications from an abortion in 1994.

Proponents of the measure recently submitted an argument for the state voter guide saying the death of "Sarah" might have been prevented but her parents were not told she had had an abortion and so did not know the reason for her failing health. The proposal, Proposition 4, will appear on California's statewide ballot in November.

Ballot measure text from California secretary of state

In court papers filed in her home state of Texas after her death, the man with whom she lived declared himself her common-law husband in an effort to secure custody of the child. Texas recognizes common-law marriage and does not view a married 15-year-old as a minor, according to an attorney for Planned Parenthood.

A lawsuit co-sponsored by Planned Parenthood Affiliates and filed Friday in Sacramento County Superior Court asks the secretary of state to remove the girl's story and other information it deemed misleading, including any reference to "Sarah's Law," from the material submitted for the official voter guide.

"If you can't believe the Sarah story, there's a lot in the ballot argument you can't believe," said Ana Sandoval, a spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood and the campaign against Proposition 4.

Backers of the initiative said they learned the details after submitting the ballot argument last month and would review the lawsuit before deciding whether to amend the language for the voter guide.

"However, she was still 15 and was not equipped to make medical decisions on her own, whether she was living with the father of her child or not," said Erica Little, a spokeswoman for the campaign supporting the proposition.

She confirmed that "Sarah" was Jammie Garcia Yanez-Villegas, who died in Texas in 1994. The name Sarah was used to protect her identity.

"We will modify the way we present Sarah to be accurate with the information," Little said. "But we don't think the use of her story is marred."

Planned Parenthood argues that the Sarah story should be dropped from the voter pamphlet because a parental notification law would not have applied in her case.

Proposition 4 would amend the California constitution to prohibit abortion for unemancipated minors until 48 hours after a physician notifies the minor's parent or legal guardian. State voters have twice rejected similar measures.

Supporters of the measure, including Orange County Dist. Atty. Tony Rackauckas, signed a ballot argument that cites' "Sarah's" death as an example of why the law is needed.

"Had someone in her family known about the abortion, Sarah's life could have been saved," the supporting argument reads.

Sarah's story was challenged in the rebuttal argument filed for the voter's guide by a group that included Kathy Kneer, president of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California.

"Nothing in Prop. 4 would have prevented her tragic death," the rebuttal says.

New Planned Parenthood Action Fund TV Ad:  McCain Out of Touch on Birth Control

The Planned Parenthood Action Fund launched a new TV ad, highlighting Sen. John McCain's inability to answer when asked whether he supports insurance coverage of birth control.

Watch their new ad.

The TV ad is part of the Planned Parenthood Action Fund’s “kNOw McCain” campaign to educate voters about John McCain’s anti-choice and anti-women’s health care record.

"John McCain is out of touch when it comes to women's health care," said Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Action Fund. "Birth control is basic health care for women. But, John McCain ducked a straightforward question about whether he thinks insurance companies should cover birth control, like they do Viagra.”

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